thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:BP, Halliburton.
Please feel free to elaborate. Remember - the question is how these particular companies stepped in for something the government "normally" does. This is not about how they are evil corporate polluters.
Halliburton is a major contractor in Iraq. Does the term "Blackwater" ring a bell? They took over food services, many other support roles that previously were handled by the army itself. (just to name ONE area of encroachment!) Sometimes (particularly in the "show" places) they did a moderately better job (somewhat better food, etc.. although that may have as much to do with advances in transport and so forth rather than the fact that Halliburton is private), but they cost us a LOT more.
The IRS privatizing collections is another example.. that is particularly bad because not only did they cost the taxpayers more, but took far less care to ensure that the actions taken were just and fair. Again, that last is one of the "dirty secrets" per why government is "less efficient". Government agencies almost always have much tighter rules regarding how they deal with people (the military and security issues are a different matter, of course).
I could go on and on and on, but no, it is not just a matter of the "big bad corporations".
ALSO, the key element in both the BP/Halliburton disaster and Massy Energy (sp? - -the big coal disaster) was failure of the government to oversee. Why? Because the regulatory agencies are far too much "in bed with" big business AND because the moves to cut costs mean a lot of those agencies have been stripped.
(this is part of why I mean when I say that big business is not assessed true costs.. they should pay themselves for the regulatory oversight necessary to ensure their businesses don't kill people, pollute our water, etc...b ut they in no way do).
PLAYER57832 wrote:Except, the "why" matters, because as much as I know that some police officers are corrupt, that does not mean I think we need the police to be disbanded and turned over to private security forms to police us.
The police is a different matter. What I'm suggesting is that you and I have more control over private entities than we do over the federal government. [/quote]I strongly disagree. Donald Trump might have more say. You and I.. do not.
And again, you make it pretty clear you have not dealt seriously with insurance companies lately.. or that you happen to have one of the elite insuranceo plans that mean you get treated far better than most of us do/have been. But.. ask this. What happens to you and your family if either you get laid off your job OR the company for which you work decides to downgrade their insurance policy because the current one "costs too much".. and, if your answer is "I will just get another job"..well, if that works (not saying it won't), then you are far more fortunate than a good many people.
thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:No, in fact it was not ignored by me at all. I addressed it earlier, in another thread where that was the topic. It was an incredibly irrresponsible plan. It had nothing to do with saving Medicare or providing more insurance to more people. It was about saving businesses money, and leaving millions in even worse shape then they are now, when they can at least hope for Medicare when they get to be 65.
What you did in that thread was read that the Republicans had a plan and then apply what you think every Republican plan would do to that particular plan. You didn't read the plan. I'm fairly certain you didn't even read an op. ed. piece about the plan.
OK, provide me a link, then.
thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Your evidence?
Because it has not worked yet, anywhere.
There are two examples I can think of off the top of my head where private industry does a better job running things that the government also runs:
Postal service vs. Federal Express
Postal service is no longer truly public. Before, it worked wonderfully. The private version has not been able to keep up with changes, primarily due to the internet, etc. However, you also have to realize that the goal of the postal service is to allow for reasonable access of information and communication. That is quite a different goal than cost-effectiveness. Many areas are simply not served by Federal Express well. I mean, sure, I can GET Federal Express, but to ship it? I have to drive some distance.
thegreekdog wrote:Public schools vs. private schools
Absolutely untrue and I truly wish you would quite bringing that one up.
Private schools are only better because they dont deal with the same issues as public schools. As a matter of fact, my fully public school gave me an education FAR superior to what any of the local private schools recieve. Granted, I was fortunate, however, so is anyone able to attend a private school.
Whenever you judge public schools on an
equal basis to private schools, public schools come out well ahead. Also, public schools allow kids to learn in a more objective and open environment, free of religious influence, etc... Granted, it can get twisted, but just look at the rise of Creationism to see what a threat non-universal public education can be.
thegreekdog wrote:I cannot think of another thing that private industry runs that the government also runs.
I can...see the list in the beginning of this post.
Also add in: Prisons, parks, biological research, medical research, etc, etc, etc.
thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Then you have no experience with Blue Cross/Blue shield, truly.
Oh but I do have experience. I have good experiences and bad experiences. The difference is that I chose to have that experience with Blue Cross/Blue Shield. If I want to change, I have a limited amount of available options. Why is that, do you think?
Because insurance companies have created that system, because you are not the customer, your employer is and because, barring government regulation limits, there is no incentive for insurance companies to provide any real coverage any longer. Because the cost of medical care has gotten so expensive that no insurance company wants to cover any but the youngest, healthiest people except where they are required to offer it by law.
Note: That is why we have Medicare, because most insurance companies did not want to cover seniors.. it worked! It worked too well and other people, besides seniors were added, costs were not increased. Now, those same "brilliant" people are happy to just throw the whole system under the bus, rather than being honest and saying we need to increase contributions and begin setting some reasonable limits to what is offered. Instead, they offer "pretend" solutions that only seem to be about preserving the system, but are really about just cutting the immediate taxpayer bill.. at the expense of all of us who will eventually need the program. EXACTLY the kind of "thinking" that got us into this debt mess from the start!
thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:The problem is too much influence from the insurance industry and other big businesses. So, it is utterly illogical that giving them more control, which IS what happens with all of your suggestions, would result in a better, more responsive system.
No, it's not illogical. The control I have over what I choose to use from private industry is much more powerful than the control I can assert over my own elected representative.
Companies still cannot vote. You can. The trouble is, too few people are willing to just listen to the latest advertisements, instead of reading through lengthy discussions or ideas. If you think private industry doesn't and won't continue to take advantage of that, I am not sure where you get the evidence that leads you to that conclusion.
thegreekdog wrote: I can't boycott the federal government. I can't report the federal government to the Better Business Bureau.
The Better Business Bureau has no enforcement ability. In both cases, you can sue if the situation is bad enough. However, per the government.. you can vote people out of office. Except, as I noted, when people would rather listen to the slick advertisements of corporation-supported interest groups, than take the time to read more boring real information.. we get what we have. This is why citizen's united was such a disasterous ruling and why it absolutely has and will impact future elections. Unless the American public suddenly gets more intelligent.
thegreekdog wrote: I can't choose to work for a different federal government. The only recourse I have is to vote between two people who basically believe that I should have no voice and to write letters that are read by low-level staffers and trashed.
Most people don't really and truly have a choice for whom they work, not really.. not if they want to keep feeding their families. Anyway, you CAN very much decide to work for a citizen's group, to work for a state or yes, even to go work for another country. However, just try buying a lot of stuff from someplace other than Walmart in much of rural America.